Peasant Art, Life in Snow Country

JP¥38,500

Condition: Used (without box and manual)
Size: 214″W × 115″D × 148″H mm

A wonderful representation of cold winter life.
There is a name of Hosei. The arm of the person pulling the sled, there is a crack at the base.

1 in stock

Ships in: 2026/05/22 - 2026/05/25
SKU: b0182gg-KM20260510-011 Categories: , , , Tags: ,

Description

  • Please note that this is an old item, so some dust stains, age spots and scratches are part of the charm of old tools.
  • Please note that it is sensitive to water.
  • Please check the condition of used items with the pictures in advance. If you have any questions, please be sure to contact us before purchase.
  • No returns after purchase. Please make your purchase after careful consideration.

Valuable peasant art and wooden dolls were made throughout Japan during a short period of time from the late Taisho Period to around the 1960s.
In 1919, Western-style painter Yamamoto Ting, who returned from his studies in Europe in 1919, attempted “simple, entertaining, and creative labor” by making use of the traditionally wasted farming season, based on his observations of farmers’ lives in Europe, in order to “bring out a great breed of industrial art from the hands of farmers all over Japan. He advocated the Peasant Art Movement as a practical advocacy to improve the livelihood of farmers through side jobs, and the Japan Peasant Art Institute established in Shinshu began to provide coeducational instruction to trainees. The Japan Peasant Art Institute was established in Shinshu, where both male and female students were taught in a coeducational program. However, the movement declined due to the economic downturn caused by the termination of government subsidies and the effects of the war, etc. Nowadays, however, peasant art is attracting renewed attention.

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